By Ted Nugent

I felt gutted by a one armed, blind, angry, drunk chimp. Stupefied. I gazed
glassy-yed and horrified at the huge, trophy whitetail buck walking off into
the swampgrass sunset, both of my white arrows sticking harmlessly in the mud
below. I hung my head and nearly wept. After a lifetime of pursuing his majesty
the whitetail deer with bow and arrow, and having cleanly killed hundreds upon
hundreds, how in God's good name could I have missed a two foot tall chest at
14 yards, broadside? And then again at twenty? I could hear Chris Farley screaming,
"FOR THE LOVE OF GOD!!" I was wounded. And painfully, this was not
the first big buck I had blown a gimme shot on in the past few weeks. This season
had brought about the most nerve rattling, mentally frustrating, dumbfounding
archery hunting experiences of my life. Worse than 1977.

Luckily, the great Fred Bear had helped me back then, as I hopelessly flung
worthless arrow after worthless arrow from my Bear recurve bow, flinching, freezing,
missing everything I shot at. Fred told me I had target panic. Until this malady
struck, I was a bad MoFo Robin Hood with the bow and arrow. I had shot naturally
since I was a small child, and was rather cocky about my accuracy, even under
extreme conditions. Squirrels running along powerlines or hugging stratospheric
oaktop limbs, I almost never missed with my Osage longbow and cedar arrows.
It was wonderful. Then the mind kicked in at the tender age of 28, and blew
the whole shootin match. Once asked what he thought about when he stood in the
batter's box before the pitch, the great Babe Ruth said, "Hell, if I tried
to think, I couldn't hit the damn ball!" Aha! Don't confuse simple function
with superfluous mindgames. Zen. Mind over matter. Second nature. Subconsciousness.
The physics of spirituality. Nike got it right. Just do it!

Seeking help and guidance from the masters, all the above was recommended
as I desperately fought to overcome my horrible problem. One morning on a major
radioshow here in central Michigan, home of more bowhunters than anywhere in
the world, in the course of an interview, I told of missing a nice deer the
evening before because of my target panic. Immediately, phone and fax lines
at our TNUSA Tedquarters lit up with people who were experiencing the same affliction,
but didn't know what it was. Many expressed relief that the ol WhackMaster Nuge
had the same jinx, and vowed to pick up their bows again and get crackin with
renewed hope. Amen and pass the arrows.

If that was the response to an isolated, off the cuff comment on one radioshow,
coupled with the conversations I have had with the hundreds of bowhunters I
guide each year, I am convinced that we may be looking at the number one cause
of attrition in the archery and bowhunting sport and industry. I am here to
tell you, that it is so painfully exasperating, that it turns many, many people
off from ever flinging an arrow again. It is that bad.

Consulting
with top bowhunters Myles Keller, Bob Foulkrod, Dick Mauch, Claude Pollington
and others, plus the expert guidance of the National Field Archery Association's
specialist, Bernie Pellerite, I again began the tortuous mental journey to remedy
my target panic. Basically, target panic is a psychological dilemma, if not
outright disease, that causes an archer to freeze off target or flinch violently
upon release of the arrow, causing terrible off target misses, and worse, much
worse, wounded game. And it has a tendency to feed off itself.

I was shocked to hear, those many years ago, that the greatest bowhunter of
alltimes, our hero, Fred Bear, had gone through a horrible case of target panic.
Knowing this master had dealt with it, I was encouraged. He had told me how
he had at one time decided to give up his beloved sport because he had it so
bad. That's scary.

Back then, Fred, and just recently, Bernie Pellerite, outlined a simple, yet
specific, regimen of shot preparation and procedure to practice. There is no
real cure for this condition, really, but there is hope and a proven treatment
that has brought back optimum backstrapdom to the Nugent dinner table. DO
NOT GIVE UP! Here's what you do;

Steps to Success

Be certain your bow is properly set up for your
exact draw length and VERY importantly, light enuf draw weight
for you to draw and hold effortlessly, gracefully, smoothly, in
a straight line. The more tension, the more aggravation. Not only
will a lightweight bow help you overpower target panic symptoms,
ultimately, it will make you a better overall archer. Especially
in the field. I shoot 55# and get complete pass thru arrow penetration
on nearly every animal including huge beasts like buffalo, eland
and zebra. DO NOT SHOOT TOO OFTEN. Only shoot a few, well disciplined
arrows per session. Be sure to stretch and warm up first before
each shooting session. I use the BowMaster training device to
keep those specialized archery muscles toned.

Set up a large, ample arrow backstop, and place
a paper plate on it. I shoot each night in the basement. Shoot
only perfect arrows at about 5 feet away. By a perfect arrow,
I mean well thought out, disciplined arrows. Each and every shot.
The goal here is to imprint on our minds a perfectly effective
shot procedure through conscientious repetition. Concentrate on
total procedure and NOT accuracy. Tell yourself that the middle
of the plate is unimportant in itself, merely another sequential
element in the shot procedure. Fully concentrate on the nocking
of the arrow, slow and easy, 100% eye focus on the center of the
plate, smooth, straight draw and anchor, and the most important
part of all, a subconscious release using back tension.

Here's the goofy part. With step #2 as a guide,
shut your eyes and take a deep breath just before the arrow is
released. That's right. Shoot with your eyes closed, hence the
large, ample arrowstop. As you prepare to draw, begin the draw,
anchor, and prepare to release, continue to look square into the
center of the plate, but close your eyes before the actual release,
and transfer all mental concentration on a "total being"
release, tightening the back muscles. Whether you use fingers
or a mechanical release, touch off the arrow with the same level
of concentration and "squeeze" so essential to firearm
marxmanship. Any jerking or punching will translate into bad accuracy
downrange. At this point, I, for the most part, was able to release
some consistently good arrows, and even take the learned shot
procedure to the field. But the target panic beast would rear
its evil head and still cause me to flinch or stumble on occasion.
So I went the next logical step in my sacred ritual of projectile
management and self-control, combining it with the love I have
of allthings wild and the hunt itself. Like my "Prayer for
the Wildthings" attitude toward the critters and my powerful
relationship with the wild, I decided my shooting could use a
little prayer as well. So it was in final agonizing, terminal
frustrating desperation that I stumbled onto this unique, wonderful
treatment for my painful target panic affliction.

As a mind clearing, calming, verbal mantra,
throughout the shot preparation and sequence, I slowly say the
sign of the cross, my little projectile management prayer. Eventually
I staggered the prayer to coincide with stages of the shot procedure.
As I concentrate on the "spot" I want to hit, I lift
my bow into actual sight picture shooting position and say, "In
the name of the Father", then as I begin to draw, "And
of the Son", then when I come to solid anchor and my eyes
are riveted to the exact point of desired arrow impact, I say,
"And of the Holy Spirit," finally I begin to tighten
my back muscles, and at "Amen" I touch her off.

Do not abandon that ever mystical flight of our awe inspiring arrow, my friends.
Snatch that bow outta the closet, back down the draw weight, and begin over
again with a new, upgraded projectile management discipline. We must tattoo
our psyche with the correct shot procedure to the point where it all comes second
nature, even in the wild outback when the beast is in our face, dancing on our
raw nerve endings. Control will happen only when we train ourselves to follow
a distinct sequence of intelligent, effective steps, in every instance of our
arrow flinging lives.

Bernie Pellerite has produced a series of great videos that deal specifically
with this target panic hell. Combined with his laser sighted training device,
it has changed archers lives across the land. Our TNUSA Lifer, Joe Church, was
nearly target panicked to death. With Bernie's program, he went on to win the
1999 IBO competition and is the best shot he has ever been. You can get Bernie's
tapes and whole package by calling 614-933-0011. I highly recommend it.

I leave you with these words of confidence; "In the name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, Amen." Backstraps R us. Go
git em!

For more on
Ted Nugent, TNUSA, Ted's new book "God Guns and Rock & Roll,"
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